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Orientation and navigation in Amphibia
Authors:Ulrich Sinsch
Affiliation: a Department of Biology, University Koblenz-Landau, Institute of Integrated Sciences, Germany
Abstract:Aquatic and terrestrial amphibians integrate acoustic, magnetic, mechanical, olfactory and visual directional information into a redundant-multisensory orientation system. The sensory information is processed to accomplish homing following active or passive displacement by either path integration, beaconing, pilotage, compass orientation or true navigation. There is evidence for two independent compass systems, a time-compensated compass based on celestial cues and a light-dependent magnetic inclination compass. Beaconing along acoustic or olfactory gradients emanating from the home site, as well as pilotage along fixed visual landmarks also form an important part in the behaviour of many species. True navigation has been shown in only one species, the aquatic salamander Notophthalmus viridescens. Evidence on the nature of the navigational map obtained so far is compatible with the magnetic map hypothesis.
Keywords:Amphibia  multisensory  orientation  path integration  beaconing  pilotage  compass orientation  map-based orientation
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